Difference between revisions of "Evolutionary Phenomenology"

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*[[TFNR - 4.4.3 From Relation to Information: the root of Evolution]]
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Revision as of 18:46, 1 January 2021

Definition

Evolutionary Phenomenology is the part of Evolutionary Knowledge that studies "what happens in the way it happens (Events and Relations - pheno). The Events (the variations of the states of the Entities, that emerge through their interaction) and the Relations that, emerging from the interactions among the Events, by organizing them, give Essence / Form to Reality and make it to evolve toward higher levels of complexity. Phenomenology describes the sub-process of Evolution itself, the manifestations, the Action, the Events produced by the Entities, the different typologies and dynamics of the Relations that represent the foundation of the Essence, the Form of Reality. These are the links allowing the Agents, the Operators of Reality, to express the process of building the dynamic and conservative structures that constitute the Essence of the Process of Formation of Reality. An endless cycle that makes the universal network of the events more and more complex and interconnected. Pheno (from ancient Greek, means "showing or manifesting", indicating the observable aspects of reality) is what we can observe. Only for descriptive purposes, as per Reality, Evolutionary Phenomenology can be seen as articulated in Phenomenology of Physical Reality, Phenomenology of Cognitive Reality and Phenomenology of Metacognitive Reality.

Evolutionary Ontology Evolutionary Phenomenology Evolutionary Dynamics
Entities Events Relations Processes Principles Action Modes of Action Information - Energy Structures of Information Forms
Primary Source Fundamental Force Elementary Events Causal Formative sub-processes - Creation - Evolution Uncertainty Elementary Action Variation Perturbation Mass G Waves Particles / Vortices Forms - Systems - Universe
Spatial Action and Reaction Propagation Translation Motion EM Waves
Elementary Field Temporal Least Action Conservation Rotation / Chirality Charge
Rotation / Axis orientation Spin
Derived Sources Derived Agents / Forces Complex Events Complex Relations Derived processes Derived Principles Derived Action
Derived Acted / Fields
Derived Physical Sources Derived Physical Forces Physical Events Physical Relations Physical Processes Laws of Nature - Physical Principles Physical Action Physical Information - Physical Energy Physical Structures of Information Physical Forms - Physical Systems - Physical Universe
Derived Physical Fields

Common definition

Phenomenology (from the Greek: phainómenon "what happens", and lógos "study") is the philosophical study of the structures of experience and consciousness.(Link to Wikipedia page: Phenomenology).

Description

Phenomenology includes the definition and classification of these fundamental relationships, of the types of links that bind entities to increasingly complex structures. Among the most important elements we find the functional connections between Operators of Reality, the physical interactions between the structures of matter, and, at the most complex levels, the articulated biochemical connections in living beings, up to the functional relationships that allow the expression of systems cognitive, social networks, culture, and so on.

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification